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Jul 17, 2019
07/19
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mark oversees nasa's orion program. the capsule is 50% bigger than apollo's, roomy enough for fou astronauts. >> so you'll be the pilot today, i'll be the commander. >> reporter: at eye level, a 21st century space dashboard. just one example of how this moon shot will be different. >> when we went last time the goal was land a person on the moon and return them safely to earth. and we did that. this time it's a little different. it's about a sustainable, long-term human space exploration program. >> reporter: orion would launch on top an sls rocket designed to be more powerful than the apollo era saturn five. e orion's crew would dock there and take a lunar lander down to the earth's surface. a handful of companies are now proposing designs for gateway. >> watch your head. >> reporter: frank showed us ,his rop grumman's mockup. would be open for the crew to go back and forth. >> reporter: up to four h that's a berth that a crew member would go in when it's time to go to sleep. >> the apollo astronauts were basically liv
mark oversees nasa's orion program. the capsule is 50% bigger than apollo's, roomy enough for fou astronauts. >> so you'll be the pilot today, i'll be the commander. >> reporter: at eye level, a 21st century space dashboard. just one example of how this moon shot will be different. >> when we went last time the goal was land a person on the moon and return them safely to earth. and we did that. this time it's a little different. it's about a sustainable, long-term human space...
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Mar 8, 2021
03/21
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told me, will congress let nasa make that shift? >> garver: probably not. >> whitaker: for the moment, the core stage for the first "artemis" mission sits in a test stand in mississippi, the same stand used for the "apollo" missions. it's awaiting a test-firing, after technical glitches cut the first one short. >> test director: and we got a shutdown. >> whitaker: there are six american flags on the moon, one for each "apollo" landing. but the newest flag there is chinese, left last year by a robotic lander that collected samples and brought them back to earth. beijing eventually plans to send astronauts. aren't we in a space race with china? >> garver: there is not a race to go to the moon. we won it. we won it six times. and i have no doubt that we will be back again, with people, before anyone else goes. >> whitaker: and charlie blackwell-thompson will be the woman to launch them, from her seat in the firing room. >> blackwell-thompson: we talk a lot about the moon, and i think the moon is phenomenal, and i can't wait to go back.
told me, will congress let nasa make that shift? >> garver: probably not. >> whitaker: for the moment, the core stage for the first "artemis" mission sits in a test stand in mississippi, the same stand used for the "apollo" missions. it's awaiting a test-firing, after technical glitches cut the first one short. >> test director: and we got a shutdown. >> whitaker: there are six american flags on the moon, one for each "apollo" landing. but...
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Aug 29, 2022
08/22
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but here's what nasa's inspector general told us. either the space agency learns to spend its money more effectively and efficiently, or those mars dreams will become pipe dreams. >> that again was mark strassmann at the kennedy space center. >>> covid vaccinations here in the united states have plummeted recently. most americans have either gotten their shots or decided they won't get vaccinated at all. that's left a lot of doses set to expire. one doctor in laredo, texas, is putting those shots to use by helping to vaccinate children from mexico. manuel bejorcas has more. >> 6:30 you got in line, now it's almost 11:00. >> reporter: this is the line for a covid vaccine. hundreds of men, women, and children in mexico wait hours for a chance to get the shot. this line is here almost every day? >> every day. >> every day? >> every day. >> reporter: dr. victor trevino works on the other side in laredo, texas, but is leading a binational effort to distribute vaccine doses here. >> the reason is we're one community. what affects us whasks
but here's what nasa's inspector general told us. either the space agency learns to spend its money more effectively and efficiently, or those mars dreams will become pipe dreams. >> that again was mark strassmann at the kennedy space center. >>> covid vaccinations here in the united states have plummeted recently. most americans have either gotten their shots or decided they won't get vaccinated at all. that's left a lot of doses set to expire. one doctor in laredo, texas, is...
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Aug 6, 2012
08/12
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how big of a deal is this for nasa? >> oh, it's a very big deal for nasa. they're under enormous budget pressure right now. the obama administration reduced funding for planetary exploration and nasa mass backed out of two joint missions with the european space agency to mars. this is the last so-called flagship mission currently in the pipeline in getting it safely to the surface of mars was a huge step for nasa. >>> the ultimate goal to put a human being on mars. where are we on the timeline with that? >> we're a long way from putting humans on mars, terrell. somewhere in the late 2020s or 2030s is the earliest opportunity. but with this successful landing, it shows once again, american ingenuity is up to the task. this was one of the most complicated entries and landings they've ever attempted and they pulled it off without a hitch. while it doesn't relate directly to a manned flight, it gives one confidence that when it comes down to it, they'll be able to figure out a way to make it happen. >> bill harwood, in pasadena, california for us. appreciate it
how big of a deal is this for nasa? >> oh, it's a very big deal for nasa. they're under enormous budget pressure right now. the obama administration reduced funding for planetary exploration and nasa mass backed out of two joint missions with the european space agency to mars. this is the last so-called flagship mission currently in the pipeline in getting it safely to the surface of mars was a huge step for nasa. >>> the ultimate goal to put a human being on mars. where are we...
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Dec 5, 2014
12/14
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nasa's spacecraft orion finally took off from the cape. and we're going to have more on that but right now, we're going to check the roads with elizabeth. >> let's do it. liz, take it away. >> this is one of the best commutes we have seen in the past several days. with all the wet weather it's been crazy for the early- morning commute. right now just one accident. we haven't been able to say that for a while but it is near the dublin interchange which is a spot that gets busy and crowded. westbound 580 approaching 680. it is blocking one lane. fortunately it sounds like a small fender-bender so i don't think it will cause huge traffic tie-ups but it's already just kind of sluggish coming into pleasanton anyway. and then it's slow again through the altamont pass. the drive time is about 21 minutes right now across that stretch which is actually down from usual for this time of the morning. here's a live look at the bay bridge toll plaza. the metering lights were turned on about 15 minutes ago. you're stacked up to the overcrossing. again be
nasa's spacecraft orion finally took off from the cape. and we're going to have more on that but right now, we're going to check the roads with elizabeth. >> let's do it. liz, take it away. >> this is one of the best commutes we have seen in the past several days. with all the wet weather it's been crazy for the early- morning commute. right now just one accident. we haven't been able to say that for a while but it is near the dublin interchange which is a spot that gets busy and...
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Jan 2, 2017
01/17
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african-american women without worked at nasa. jamie yuccas has the story. >> you think you can find me a different-- for this data. >> yes, sir. i prefer it over. >> hidden figures tells the true story of the black female math maticians at nasa who helped launch john glenn into orbit. >> that's john glenn. >> what do you do for nasa. >> calculate your launching card nights. >> engineer. >> the women katherine g johnson, dorothy vaughn and mary jackson were part of nasa's group of human computers. oscar winner octavia spencer was the first to sign on. >> when i learned that these women did exist and did make these contributions, i felt compelled to be a part of the telling of their story. >> you have identification. >> we are just on our way to work at nasa, sir. >> i had no idea they hired. >> quite a few women working in the space program. >> as women and as african-americans they faced and
african-american women without worked at nasa. jamie yuccas has the story. >> you think you can find me a different-- for this data. >> yes, sir. i prefer it over. >> hidden figures tells the true story of the black female math maticians at nasa who helped launch john glenn into orbit. >> that's john glenn. >> what do you do for nasa. >> calculate your launching card nights. >> engineer. >> the women katherine g johnson, dorothy vaughn and mary...
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0.0
Mar 12, 2023
03/23
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you're on the nasa team. >> reporter: as nasa's newest team members, these students travel to the johnson space center in houston to hand deliver the parts they've built. >> it changes your perspective from that of a little enclosed, it's just a grade what if i fail, to wow, this is going up to the space station and it's going to help astronauts store their materials and their experiments. this is a little bigger than an a plus in a class. >> reporter: students are trained and mentored by nasa employees, and the parts they make are inspected and held to nasa's rigorous standards. >> these are not widgets, and these are not paper weights. these are actual structural components that are flying to the space station. >> reporter: students are told when a part they've worked on is included in a nasa launch, and they even get a photo of it in use in space. for students like abigail gibson, the nasa hunch program has helped them discover new career paths they never would have considered. >> i feel really ready for what's going to come after high school, so that's pretty nice, and i'm getting fir
you're on the nasa team. >> reporter: as nasa's newest team members, these students travel to the johnson space center in houston to hand deliver the parts they've built. >> it changes your perspective from that of a little enclosed, it's just a grade what if i fail, to wow, this is going up to the space station and it's going to help astronauts store their materials and their experiments. this is a little bigger than an a plus in a class. >> reporter: students are trained and...
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Feb 9, 2022
02/22
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the usual nasa story. >> reporter: according to a spokesperson for the u.s. department of agriculture, they plan to have most of the turkeys trapped to be relocated in a week or two. in mountain view, max darrow, kpix 5. >>> blood banks across the bay area made a plea for people to roll up their sleeves and donate blood in the middle of the first-ever national blood crisis. the pandemic caused a steep decline in blood donation, but if people answer the call to help out? one of the oldest blood banks in the nation told kpix that there is still a lot of work to do to boost the blood supply. >> the omicron surge has a major impact than what we are doing. a lot of people are testing positive still. they can't go to work. they are taking precautions. they don't want to donate. on top of that, we have businesses and schools that bring in a majority of the blood, and they are not holding blood drives. >> the bottom line is there is a huge plea for anyone who can donate to do it regularly. >>> an unusually dry start to the new year has the water district in the south
the usual nasa story. >> reporter: according to a spokesperson for the u.s. department of agriculture, they plan to have most of the turkeys trapped to be relocated in a week or two. in mountain view, max darrow, kpix 5. >>> blood banks across the bay area made a plea for people to roll up their sleeves and donate blood in the middle of the first-ever national blood crisis. the pandemic caused a steep decline in blood donation, but if people answer the call to help out? one of...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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. >> obviously we weren't there, but i would certainly say the nasa of the '60s was not drastically unlike space x of now. learning as they go, learning about flying in space, learning the hard lessons and being successful. >> start and lift off. >> reporter: hard lessons like this one in 2015. a falcon 9 rocket lifting cargo to the space station disintegrated minutes after lift off. >> and we appear to have had a launch vehicle failure. >> reporter: and last year another setback when a crew dragon capsule exploded during a ground test. >> while it's disappointing, it also can be a real gift to the final design. >> reporter: the company embraced its failures. >> to be totally frank, if it hasn't been some hardware on the test end, i don't think you tested it hard enough. that's the reality. >> i think sometimes the aerospace industry shies away from failure in the development phase. >> reporter: gwen shot well is space x's president, musk's right hand. >> it looks bad politically, it's tough and the media certainly makes a lot out of failures. but candidly, that's the best way to learn, is
. >> obviously we weren't there, but i would certainly say the nasa of the '60s was not drastically unlike space x of now. learning as they go, learning about flying in space, learning the hard lessons and being successful. >> start and lift off. >> reporter: hard lessons like this one in 2015. a falcon 9 rocket lifting cargo to the space station disintegrated minutes after lift off. >> and we appear to have had a launch vehicle failure. >> reporter: and last year...
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Mar 4, 2024
03/24
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>> for humans, we're working with nasa on the artemis v mission. that's planned for 2029. >> that's not so different from elon musk's forecast of when spacex can land humans back on the moon, even if it doesn't match nasa's. like the starship, blue origin's lander will require in-space refueling. but couluris hopes that it will help trim costs. >> our new vehicle will be a reusable vehicle from its first mission. that lander the for the astronauts is a reusable lander. so now you're not just taking the equipment and throwing it away. you're re-using it for the next mission. >> you do it again and again and again. is that where the cost savings comes in? >> exactly. we are now building with nasa the infrastructure to ensure lunar permanency. >> you have said that the artemis program is the beginning, not the end. tell me, what is the future you see? >> i see us landing on mars. absolutely see us landing on mars. but we have to work through the moon to get to mars. >> these are magnificent goals, going back to the moon, going to mars, do we have the
>> for humans, we're working with nasa on the artemis v mission. that's planned for 2029. >> that's not so different from elon musk's forecast of when spacex can land humans back on the moon, even if it doesn't match nasa's. like the starship, blue origin's lander will require in-space refueling. but couluris hopes that it will help trim costs. >> our new vehicle will be a reusable vehicle from its first mission. that lander the for the astronauts is a reusable lander. so now...
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Aug 23, 2012
08/12
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nasa's curiosity rover takes its first test drive on the martian nasa's curiosity rover takes its first test drive on the martian surface. captioning funded by cbs >>> this is the "cbs morning news" for thursday, august 23, 2012. >>> good morning everybody. good to be with you. i'm terrell brown. the race for the white house got tighter as republicans get ready to officially make mitt romney their presidential nominee. quinnipiac university, cbs news, new york times poll shows romney gaining ground on president obama in two critical battleground states and nine out of ten voters in florida, ohio and wisconsin say they know who they're going to vote for. susan mcginnis is in washington with details. good morning to you. >> good morning, terrell. the romney campaign is hoping to gain votes from the huge exposure that a convention brings and this new poll shows romney is getting an early bump in some critical states. workers are putting the finishing touches on the convention floor before republicans arrive in tampa. florida is a key battleground state in the race for the white house and m
nasa's curiosity rover takes its first test drive on the martian nasa's curiosity rover takes its first test drive on the martian surface. captioning funded by cbs >>> this is the "cbs morning news" for thursday, august 23, 2012. >>> good morning everybody. good to be with you. i'm terrell brown. the race for the white house got tighter as republicans get ready to officially make mitt romney their presidential nominee. quinnipiac university, cbs news, new york times...
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Aug 29, 2022
08/22
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nasa's most ambitious moonshot since the apollo era. no one was hmoonwalked since 1972, the half century since apollo 17 ended lunar landings for americans for anyone. >> when this mission is over, you'll have a much better sense of what these guys went through. >> yes, absolutely. a whole new appreciation for it too, i'm sure, because i know it's not going to be easy. >> reporter: at liftoff, rick le bro takes charge of artemis i as its lead flight director. >> how hurtful to the program would it be if it doesn't go right? >> it conceivably could be -- it could end the program. i hope we don't have to worry about that. that's my goal. >> reporter: sometime later this decade, nasa intends to see astronauts moonwalking again, including an astronaut of color and a woman. for many at nasa, the moon looks as close as it has in a half century. >> i do look at the moon differently. i'm sure we looked at it that way back when we were flying apollo, but it's been a long time. >> reporter: nasa will tell you that wait is almost over, but its lun
nasa's most ambitious moonshot since the apollo era. no one was hmoonwalked since 1972, the half century since apollo 17 ended lunar landings for americans for anyone. >> when this mission is over, you'll have a much better sense of what these guys went through. >> yes, absolutely. a whole new appreciation for it too, i'm sure, because i know it's not going to be easy. >> reporter: at liftoff, rick le bro takes charge of artemis i as its lead flight director. >> how...
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Jun 26, 2019
06/19
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we are working with nasa. >> reporter: you're not competitors? >> not competitors to nasa, no. they're a customer as well as a partner. >> reporter: shotwell does think that spacex will put people on mars first. >> we would love to be in a position to send a ship to mars in 2022. hopefully if we did a good job in 2022, we would be able to send people in 2024. >> reporter: do people say you're crazy? >> people have said we're crazy since we started. >> reporter: this is the enormous rocket that spacex is building for mars. it's called the super heavy. it's not quite as big as the saturn booster, the biggest of all time, but spacex says it's six times as powerful. so why mars now? >> the characteristics of the planet were close enough to earth that we could see a path to putting humans on mars and having them survive. but it is a fixer-upper planet. life is not going to be easy on mars for the first few decades for sure. >> we're in the middle of a lava flow. hawaii space exploration simulation. >> reporter: kim is a professor after the university of hawaii and the master mind be
we are working with nasa. >> reporter: you're not competitors? >> not competitors to nasa, no. they're a customer as well as a partner. >> reporter: shotwell does think that spacex will put people on mars first. >> we would love to be in a position to send a ship to mars in 2022. hopefully if we did a good job in 2022, we would be able to send people in 2024. >> reporter: do people say you're crazy? >> people have said we're crazy since we started. >>...
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Jul 22, 2019
07/19
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nasa accidentally erased them? are they in permanent cold storage, and will never be viewed again, or were they misplaced, and have never been found? juliet will contemplate that, that's juliet's contemplative. those are the choices. now, we will have a look at the top of the sales force tower, and the numbers, still warm in the east bay, san francisco at 64 the west coast we have high pressure that is beginning to rebuild. warming trend through midweek, that will just be in the mid- 90s by midweek, not much in the way of low cloudiness overnight, and we should have a mostly sunny day on the way for the bay area tomorrow. but while temperatures inland bump up a bit, a sea breeze keeps this fresh and mild along the shoreline, so we will sum that up by saying, that we get partly moody tonight, it warms a bit inland, cloudy near the coast inland highs near 90 by midweek, giants taking on the cubs tomorrow night, gametime 60 degrees, and overnight lows in the mid 50s, daytime highs tomorrow will be at 92 in concord and
nasa accidentally erased them? are they in permanent cold storage, and will never be viewed again, or were they misplaced, and have never been found? juliet will contemplate that, that's juliet's contemplative. those are the choices. now, we will have a look at the top of the sales force tower, and the numbers, still warm in the east bay, san francisco at 64 the west coast we have high pressure that is beginning to rebuild. warming trend through midweek, that will just be in the mid- 90s by...
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Sep 26, 2022
09/22
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here are some of nasa's animati. the asteroid is nearly a millios million miles away from all of us. nasa's dart spacecraft will be flying about 14,000 miles ar miles an hour when it slams int. it's a small moon that's orbitig that's orbiting the asteroid. is asteroid. it's about the size of your average pepsi machine. ime machine. imagine this. nasa says it will be like a bug crashing into an suv. the impact will not destroy this place if you wanted to know the name. nasa aims to nudge it off its course a little bit by as much as 10 minutes. >> trying to displace the aster, the asteroid, so we can maybe save humanity in a case that te object comes towards us u. this is a test to see how well we cn well we can do that and displace the asteroid and how much can e learn from this experiment to dt do it when had the time comes and an asteroid comes towards us to move it. >> all right, you might be worrd be worried from what you heard . but they say the odds of the asd of the asteroid hitting the earth would devastate th
here are some of nasa's animati. the asteroid is nearly a millios million miles away from all of us. nasa's dart spacecraft will be flying about 14,000 miles ar miles an hour when it slams int. it's a small moon that's orbitig that's orbiting the asteroid. is asteroid. it's about the size of your average pepsi machine. ime machine. imagine this. nasa says it will be like a bug crashing into an suv. the impact will not destroy this place if you wanted to know the name. nasa aims to nudge it off...
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Jun 9, 2017
06/17
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spacex relies on nasa contracts and its launch pad. but this cooperation could turn into competition. manuel bojorquez has more from the kennedy space center in florida. >> reporter: complete with a hollywood soundtrack, nasa for years has promoted plans to send humans into deep space. but its space launch system won't be ready to bring humans around the moon until at least 2021. so it came as a surprise to nasa when spacex founder elon musk held a conference call. >> so this is, yeah -- should be super inspirational. >> reporter: announcing plans to use a powerful rocket that hasn't yet flown to sling private tourists around the moon next year. an ambitious timeline according to mary lynn ditmar, who represents some of spacex's competitors through the coalition for deep space exploration. >> if you're putting all this schedule pressure on you're automatically creating an environment where you are operating at higher risk because you have to meet a deadline. >> do you see that happening currently? >> i'm concerned about the 2018 deadli
spacex relies on nasa contracts and its launch pad. but this cooperation could turn into competition. manuel bojorquez has more from the kennedy space center in florida. >> reporter: complete with a hollywood soundtrack, nasa for years has promoted plans to send humans into deep space. but its space launch system won't be ready to bring humans around the moon until at least 2021. so it came as a surprise to nasa when spacex founder elon musk held a conference call. >> so this is,...
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Jul 16, 2019
07/19
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i'll talk to two nasa astronauts. right now they are 250 miles up on the international space station. we'll chat with them about what the mission means and also only on "ctm" i'll take you behind the scenes at kennedy space center to show you where the apollo 11 astronauts got ready for the mission. plus, we'll talk to former nasa astronaut peggy witzen about how apollo 11 inspired her to break records in space. all astronauts to a number say when you see the earth from space you realize we are all one. now back to you guys in new york. >> another beautiful morning down at kennedy space center just like it was 50 years ago. >> yes. i love the message. when you see earth from up high we're all one. i think we need that message right now. >> now more than ever. we'll have much more from tony ahead. >>> meanwhile, in washington the house could vote as early as today on a democratic resolution denouncing president trump's racist tweets. moments ago the president tweeted about those comments. he wrote, those tweets are not
i'll talk to two nasa astronauts. right now they are 250 miles up on the international space station. we'll chat with them about what the mission means and also only on "ctm" i'll take you behind the scenes at kennedy space center to show you where the apollo 11 astronauts got ready for the mission. plus, we'll talk to former nasa astronaut peggy witzen about how apollo 11 inspired her to break records in space. all astronauts to a number say when you see the earth from space you...
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Aug 21, 2017
08/17
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nasa is sending up a couple of jet with special cameras hoping to get 29,000 images. sandra osborne, kpix 5 . >> the partial eclipse will start just a 9:00 a.m. peeking around 10:15 and it will be all over after 11:30. i think michelle is wearing the perfect close with the yellow and these glasses. >> i wanted to be the sun and you could be the one blocking. >> that is what this color is. [ laughter ] we work together properly. we had so many invitations from schools inviting us to participate today and it is so difficult but it is still a learning curve for many of the kids. i remember the last partial eclipse we had in 2012 and that treating works. we have so many tips and you can visit us at www.cbssf.com for more information on that but most notably today is the weather watchers because they can tell me where it is clear and where it is not. in san francisco they are socked in and antioch is a great place to watch the cell eclipse. it is now partly cloudy in santa rosa. livermore is cloudy and san jose is cloudy. the best places to go is far inland to the east and
nasa is sending up a couple of jet with special cameras hoping to get 29,000 images. sandra osborne, kpix 5 . >> the partial eclipse will start just a 9:00 a.m. peeking around 10:15 and it will be all over after 11:30. i think michelle is wearing the perfect close with the yellow and these glasses. >> i wanted to be the sun and you could be the one blocking. >> that is what this color is. [ laughter ] we work together properly. we had so many invitations from schools inviting...
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Jul 8, 2011
07/11
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an exciting morning over at nasa in mountain view. that's as the tip of the day is this, look at the colors of the spring mix, this is a whole bunch of baby lettuce. take a look at this, all together, at one time it was expensive now they retail between 3.99 and 4.99 a pound. you can make a salad for four or five people. you have to make sure there's dodges in the display. when you -- there's tongs in the display, the colors need to be nice and bright. no yellow. when you bring them home, open up the bag so they can breathe merchandise the fridge. if you do not do that, they will decay 5-10 times faster and one more thing, in the store, it not getting wet. you know, a lot of times you go to the retail area and the mist comes down, when the water hits the lettuce it breaks them down. do not wash it before you store it but watch them before eating it and pat them dry with a paper towel. spring mix in the summer, it's a wonderful thing. bye bye. >>> and an exciting morning over at nasa in mountain view, large crowds gathered to watch the
an exciting morning over at nasa in mountain view. that's as the tip of the day is this, look at the colors of the spring mix, this is a whole bunch of baby lettuce. take a look at this, all together, at one time it was expensive now they retail between 3.99 and 4.99 a pound. you can make a salad for four or five people. you have to make sure there's dodges in the display. when you -- there's tongs in the display, the colors need to be nice and bright. no yellow. when you bring them home, open...
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Nov 27, 2018
11/18
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remember if you're spacex nasa is also your biggest customer. >> now nasa has a competitor and a partner in its own backyard and it's been collaborative friction and i think the catalyst for new things. >> reporter: so not so much public versus private, more of a partnership with competitive aspirations. >> i think everyone at nasa knows that if they don't plan a mission to mars or build a huge space station, elon musk will. >> reporter: but while technology is moving ahead very quickly it does not mean it will necessarily meet our expectations. >> people imagined in the 1980s we'd be flying 100 space shuttles every year and have a moon base. >> reporter: the future is kind of hard to pin down like the people who drew up these scenes would have been blown away by these smartphones that broadcast today's landing. so the future of space exploration is not always the way we imagine it might be. in oakland, wilson walker, kpix5. >>> millions of americans letting their mobile device or mouse do the shopping today. >> yeah. cyber monday, the traditional follow-up to black friday blowing up old
remember if you're spacex nasa is also your biggest customer. >> now nasa has a competitor and a partner in its own backyard and it's been collaborative friction and i think the catalyst for new things. >> reporter: so not so much public versus private, more of a partnership with competitive aspirations. >> i think everyone at nasa knows that if they don't plan a mission to mars or build a huge space station, elon musk will. >> reporter: but while technology is moving...
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Jul 23, 2019
07/19
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nasa was looking for the right stuff. city with elite universities to support research and training. modern airport. andle climate for working out doors year round. by 1960 houston had it all plus good old boy politicians to boot. >> you had to have political clout and houston had it in abundance. >> next month we'll have leadership in space you wouldn't have without albert thomas. >> thomas controlled the budget for nasa as chair of the subcommittee. and vice president johnson was also on board and construction magnet george r brown. >> kennedy barely won houston in 1960. he would need to win it in 1964 and pouring hundreds and millions of dollars into houston was good new frontier politics. >> nasa announced the manned space center will be located in houston on september 19, 1961, and every news paper in town the front page was covered we're space city. we are now fighting the russians from houston. it was -- spectacular. >> a year later president kennedy was at rice teeing up the mission. >> we choose to go to the moon
nasa was looking for the right stuff. city with elite universities to support research and training. modern airport. andle climate for working out doors year round. by 1960 houston had it all plus good old boy politicians to boot. >> you had to have political clout and houston had it in abundance. >> next month we'll have leadership in space you wouldn't have without albert thomas. >> thomas controlled the budget for nasa as chair of the subcommittee. and vice president...
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Jun 1, 2020
06/20
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it's a new mission to mars, nasa's most ambitious one yet. the goal is to land a new vehicle, a high-tech rover, to search for signs of ancient life on the red planet and, eventually, bring that evidence back to earth. unmanned space craft have been exploring and photographing mars for decades. but no one's ever discovered clear signs of life there, or anywhere else in the universe. nasa scientists now believe they've found a perfect place to look. coronavirus could have derailed the whole mission, but so far the launch is still on schedule. blast off is less than two months away. given all that's already happened, this new rover's name seems particularly appropriate: "perseverance". it'll take seven months and a journey of hundreds of millions of miles for "perseverance" to get to mars, the planet whose reddish hue, caused by rust particles in the rocks and soil, led the romans to name it after their god of war. today, the surface of mars is a radiation-filled desert. it's freezing-- minus 80 degrees fahrenheit on average. there are windswep
it's a new mission to mars, nasa's most ambitious one yet. the goal is to land a new vehicle, a high-tech rover, to search for signs of ancient life on the red planet and, eventually, bring that evidence back to earth. unmanned space craft have been exploring and photographing mars for decades. but no one's ever discovered clear signs of life there, or anywhere else in the universe. nasa scientists now believe they've found a perfect place to look. coronavirus could have derailed the whole...
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Jul 22, 2019
07/19
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mark kirasich oversees nasa's orion program. the capsule is 50% bigger than apollo's, roomy enough for four astronauts. >> so you will be the pilot today, i'll be the commander. >> reporter: at eye level, a 21st century space dashboard, just one example of how this moon shot will be different. >> when we went last time, the goal was land a person on the moon and return them safely to earth, and we did that. this time it is a little bit different. it's about a sustainable, long- term human space exploration program. >> reporter: orion would launch on top of an s.l.s. rocket designed to be more powerful than the apollo-era saturn 5. its destination, a mini space station orbiting the moon called "gateway." orion's crew would dock there and take a lunar lander down to the moon's surface. a handful of companies are now proposing designs for gateway. >> watch your head. >> reporter: frank demauro showed us northrop-grumman's mockup of a gateway habitat. he oversees space systems for the company. >> when orion is here, this would be op
mark kirasich oversees nasa's orion program. the capsule is 50% bigger than apollo's, roomy enough for four astronauts. >> so you will be the pilot today, i'll be the commander. >> reporter: at eye level, a 21st century space dashboard, just one example of how this moon shot will be different. >> when we went last time, the goal was land a person on the moon and return them safely to earth, and we did that. this time it is a little bit different. it's about a sustainable,...
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Jul 15, 2015
07/15
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have never explored before. >> reporter: nasa ames research center is holding a watch party as nasa scientists and the public follow developments of the new horizonning probe. james anderson is a high school senior here from idaho as part of a summer science camp. >> when i realized that i would be at ames center during the fly-by,s of like, oh, my goodness! this is amazing! >> reporter: others say, there is just no telling what we may learn from the new horizons mission. >> this is the absolute first. we didn't even know pluto existed a few years back and now we are sending a craft there. >> reporter: now, despite the excitement today, the signal this afternoon was really just a signal that, hey, the probe has arrived. it passed pluto. it's alive. the power systems are work. the telemetry systems are work. we won't see pictures until tomorrow and then scientists say it's going to take more than a year to slowly download all of the data that's been collected during this past -- over the past 24 hours or so. live at nasa ames in mountain view, i'm mark sayre, kpix 5. >>> after nearly
have never explored before. >> reporter: nasa ames research center is holding a watch party as nasa scientists and the public follow developments of the new horizonning probe. james anderson is a high school senior here from idaho as part of a summer science camp. >> when i realized that i would be at ames center during the fly-by,s of like, oh, my goodness! this is amazing! >> reporter: others say, there is just no telling what we may learn from the new horizons mission....
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Jul 19, 2011
07/11
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we care about it just like the nasa people do. >> and liftoff! >> reporter: next spring, nasa expects to pick two finalists and some time in 2015 launch astronauts on the first commercial flight to the space station. mark strassmann, cbs news, boulder, colorado. >> schieffer: and that is the news. i'm bob schieffer, cbs news, new york. i'll be here while scott is away and it's nice to be back. thank you, we'll see you tomorrow. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org bu in the day time." >>> your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. >>> women don't tend to be the ones that go around doing burglaries in the daytime. >> two young women busted in an east bay crime spree. who they had with them that really surprised police. >>> a foot chase and a shootout with police. new details about the suspect's criminal past and we'll hear how cops say they can prove who fired first. >>> prices are low, but some house hunters are losing out on great deals. the surprising thing more and more buyers are showing u
we care about it just like the nasa people do. >> and liftoff! >> reporter: next spring, nasa expects to pick two finalists and some time in 2015 launch astronauts on the first commercial flight to the space station. mark strassmann, cbs news, boulder, colorado. >> schieffer: and that is the news. i'm bob schieffer, cbs news, new york. i'll be here while scott is away and it's nice to be back. thank you, we'll see you tomorrow. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media...
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Jul 20, 2019
07/19
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nasa wants american space taxis. so it hired two companies, spacex and boeing, to become its space uber and lyft. >> it's come to a final stop. >> astronaut chris ferguson commanded nasa's final shuttle mission. >> it was amazing tow real it is becoming. >> he hopes to ride a spaceship again. the boeing star liner he helped design. >> i'm a corporate astronaut now what the heck does of a corporate astronaut mean? we don't know. >> reporter: spacex has built reusable rockets and sleek space capsule called crew dragon. like boeing, spacex is two years behind schedule with vague promises about when it will fly astronauts. >> we still haven't launched anyone yet but hopefully we will later this year and so that would definitely be the culmination of a long dream for a lot of people. >> reporter: spacex's first crew, astronauts bob behnken and doug hurley are competitive guys in a space race. >> you want to get there before ferguson? >> absolutely. >> why does that matter? >> i've played a lot of sports competitively and
nasa wants american space taxis. so it hired two companies, spacex and boeing, to become its space uber and lyft. >> it's come to a final stop. >> astronaut chris ferguson commanded nasa's final shuttle mission. >> it was amazing tow real it is becoming. >> he hopes to ride a spaceship again. the boeing star liner he helped design. >> i'm a corporate astronaut now what the heck does of a corporate astronaut mean? we don't know. >> reporter: spacex has built...
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Jul 8, 2011
07/11
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nasa is watching it very careful. good friend told us when comes down to t the launch chances are always 50/50 so we are hoping for the glass halfful. >> like human beings we are all day-to-day, right? >>> ahead, prince william and catherine will fly to los angeles for the weekend as they leave canada. >> real westerners. >>> the shuttle "atlantis" crew three men and one woman are on board the spacecraft. earlier this morning they were there for the historic mission. you see them coming out and getting ready to load up and make their way down. before they came to the kennedy space center though, they sat down with us to talk about this moment, this mission, and what it all means to them and for the future of space exploration. >> minus 10 9, 8. >> i remember exactly where i was for sts-1. a college student. i think a freshman in school. i remember we stopped class and they had the tv on in the auditorium. >> first space shuttle launch. >> far away goal. just seemed so over my head i could never be an astronaut. >> rep
nasa is watching it very careful. good friend told us when comes down to t the launch chances are always 50/50 so we are hoping for the glass halfful. >> like human beings we are all day-to-day, right? >>> ahead, prince william and catherine will fly to los angeles for the weekend as they leave canada. >> real westerners. >>> the shuttle "atlantis" crew three men and one woman are on board the spacecraft. earlier this morning they were there for the...
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Apr 17, 2017
04/17
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this animation shows nasa's cassini spacecraft. instruments aboard the spacecraft detected a significant amount of hydrogen. nasa announced its findings during an online news conference. >> it is coming from a hydrothermal event on the sea floor of insolitus. >> reporter: here on earth, hydrogen serves as food source for microbes. >> these warm oases may have life. >> they have all the ingredients that we know of to supply life as we know it. >> reporter: europa has a mass of frozen water beneath its mass. it spotted towering plumes of water. >> we are pushing the frontiers, looking in a way that we never thought possible before, for environments in our solar system which may harbor life. >> reporter: to do that, they need new tools. nasa will retire the cassini spacecraft this year, nearly 20 years after it launched. >> four years for this moment. >> reporter: nasa engineers have already prototyped new technology to discover more about these oceans, including a rover that could drill through ice and send samples back to the surfac
this animation shows nasa's cassini spacecraft. instruments aboard the spacecraft detected a significant amount of hydrogen. nasa announced its findings during an online news conference. >> it is coming from a hydrothermal event on the sea floor of insolitus. >> reporter: here on earth, hydrogen serves as food source for microbes. >> these warm oases may have life. >> they have all the ingredients that we know of to supply life as we know it. >> reporter: europa...
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Jul 15, 2015
07/15
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in the meantime we are monitoring nasa tv. they have been showing us video from mission control. let's listen in to the press conference that started. >> the first image that i would like to bring up was taken about two hours ago by the solar dynamics observatory. i hope you recognize that object, and i think you know where we are going. mercury. from the messenger mission, venus. from magellan. if anyone doesn't recognize the next planet, i would like you to leave the auditorium. [laughter] security will escort you to area 51. [laughter] [applause] the red planet mars, i had to get a hubble image in their somewhere. [laughter] [applause] i realized that i missed a series, jupiter with some of the jovian moons and shadow. from the galileo spacecraft cassini, it is saturn. this is a striking image. uranus, someone made a crackdown they put it in sideways. and for the grand finale, i turned it over to alan stern, the head investigator up the pluto grand horizon. [applause] >> before we turn it over to alan, i have a few words to say. yesterday, america's space program took another
in the meantime we are monitoring nasa tv. they have been showing us video from mission control. let's listen in to the press conference that started. >> the first image that i would like to bring up was taken about two hours ago by the solar dynamics observatory. i hope you recognize that object, and i think you know where we are going. mercury. from the messenger mission, venus. from magellan. if anyone doesn't recognize the next planet, i would like you to leave the auditorium....
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Aug 6, 2012
08/12
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nasa called it the most complex landing ever attempted on mars. that rover landed inside the crater. curiosity carries 10 scientific instruments and as many objectives >> my particular interest in the search for life on mars is the possibility we will find a different type of life and we have honored >> this whole enterprise comes out to be a cost of a movie, i know i speak on behalf of my colleagues that that is a movie i want to see >> we saw the first black and white pictures that were being back. they expect color images later this week and this is just the beginning of a two-year long mission that will determine if mars ever offered conditions that were favorable for life. it took 36 weeks to get there, 352 million mi.. now the work begins. >> that was the hard part and now all the fun. we have been asking, what about the price tag? the think that $2.5 billion is a good investment?. bill says, you bet. comment on facebook or twitter or e-mail. the time now is 640. a busy week ahead for state lawmakers. a costly computer glitch, the promotion
nasa called it the most complex landing ever attempted on mars. that rover landed inside the crater. curiosity carries 10 scientific instruments and as many objectives >> my particular interest in the search for life on mars is the possibility we will find a different type of life and we have honored >> this whole enterprise comes out to be a cost of a movie, i know i speak on behalf of my colleagues that that is a movie i want to see >> we saw the first black and white...
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0.0
Aug 29, 2022
08/22
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it's all systems go for nasa's most powerful rocket ever. the artemis 1 mission is ready for lift-off. >> this is a big milestone. >> reporter: jeremy parsons is on the team in charge of sending the capsule in more than a one-month journey. >> this a first big step. >> reporter: the $4 billion unpiloted mission is a bit of a test run, going beyond the far side of the moon before returning to earth's orbit splashing into the pacific. traveling a total of more than 1.3 million miles. are you testing to its limits to make sure these things are capable to do what you all are designing it to do? >> at every level. right down to the smallest piece. we test, we test, we test again. when we integrate it, we test once more. >> reporter: it kicks off nasa's hope of getting to the moon as early as 2025. >> when you go on space walk, you can't take chances. certainly not when you're building a human rated spacecraft. >> reporter: setting the stage for future human exploration into deep space and possibly a landing on mars. so we'll continue to monitor t
it's all systems go for nasa's most powerful rocket ever. the artemis 1 mission is ready for lift-off. >> this is a big milestone. >> reporter: jeremy parsons is on the team in charge of sending the capsule in more than a one-month journey. >> this a first big step. >> reporter: the $4 billion unpiloted mission is a bit of a test run, going beyond the far side of the moon before returning to earth's orbit splashing into the pacific. traveling a total of more than 1.3...
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Jul 17, 2019
07/19
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you can put any display on any one of the panels. >> reporter: nasa wants an s.l.s. rocket, the most powerful ever, to launch orion to the moon. but orion and s.l.s. are years behind schedule and billions over budget. michael collins rode to the moon on apollo 11. >> we should now be planning for a visit to mars. a trip to mars makes apollo look like child's play. >> reporter: mars is nasa's ultimate goal.mutes long-term living on the red planet. for example, every communication is delayed 20 minutes to reflect the time lag communicating between mars and earth. a moon landing would only be a stepping stone. >> this time when we go, though, we're going to stay. >> reporter: nasa administrator jim says sustainability is paramount, harvesting the moon's resources, including it's water ice. >> we'll prove the technology and then take the technology and capability on to mars. >> reporter: on to mars, but nasa has never laid out a plan of how to get there. the cost would be astronomical, clearly out of this world, but, norah, first they have to find a way to get back to th
you can put any display on any one of the panels. >> reporter: nasa wants an s.l.s. rocket, the most powerful ever, to launch orion to the moon. but orion and s.l.s. are years behind schedule and billions over budget. michael collins rode to the moon on apollo 11. >> we should now be planning for a visit to mars. a trip to mars makes apollo look like child's play. >> reporter: mars is nasa's ultimate goal.mutes long-term living on the red planet. for example, every...
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Aug 6, 2012
08/12
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counting down to the landing of nasa's newest rover curiosity. those stories when the "cbs evening news" continues.Ñii] wow. that was fast. this is the check i've been waiting for. mom had a guaranteed acceptance life insurance policy through the colonial penn program, and this will really help with the cost of her final expenses. is it affordable? it costs less than 35 cents a day-- that's pretty affordable, huh? that's less than the cost of a postage stamp. so, you said it was guaranteed acceptance? yes. it's for people ages 50 to 85. there's no medical exam or health questions. you can't be turned down because of your health. it fit right into mom's budget and gave her added peace of mind. you should give them a call. man: are you between the ages of 50 and 85? for less than 35 cents a day, you can get guaranteed acceptance life insurance through the colonial penn program. you cannot be turned down because of your health. there are no health questions or medical exam. your rate will never go up, and your benefit will never go down due to age-
counting down to the landing of nasa's newest rover curiosity. those stories when the "cbs evening news" continues.Ñii] wow. that was fast. this is the check i've been waiting for. mom had a guaranteed acceptance life insurance policy through the colonial penn program, and this will really help with the cost of her final expenses. is it affordable? it costs less than 35 cents a day-- that's pretty affordable, huh? that's less than the cost of a postage stamp. so, you said it was...
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Jul 22, 2019
07/19
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it was a tremendous setback to nasa. nasa was determined to keep the goal. ig nation. >> the first saturn 5, was those teammates. >> in the beginning, god created the heaven and the earth. and god said, let there be life. the interesting moment is when they're on the moon and they have landed. what a strange feeling be on the moon and have the earth in the distance. how does one reconstruct such a feeling? >> they stayed within the vicinity of their spacecraft. armstrong collected a little bit of soil. planting of the american flag on the moon. neither armstrong were keen on the photography from it. thank goodness they did, it's the photographic evidence around. >> nasa was saying about 20 million who thought it was right. >> congress itself is not provide i providing funds to deal with poverty like you see here. >> it's about $180 billion today. the answer why you get yes is the spin-off technology. out of that comes smaller computers. mri, suits for firefighters that don't burn. many people think that nasa gave birth to silicon valley. >> it's primitive to
it was a tremendous setback to nasa. nasa was determined to keep the goal. ig nation. >> the first saturn 5, was those teammates. >> in the beginning, god created the heaven and the earth. and god said, let there be life. the interesting moment is when they're on the moon and they have landed. what a strange feeling be on the moon and have the earth in the distance. how does one reconstruct such a feeling? >> they stayed within the vicinity of their spacecraft. armstrong...
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Aug 4, 2018
08/18
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nasa today introduced the nine men and women who will lead the u.s. into the next era of space flight. for seven years, american astronauts have had to hitch rides into space on russian rockets. that will soon change. avid begnaud reports from the johnson space center in houston. >> for the first time since 2011, we are on the brink of launching american astronauts on american rockets from american soil. ter:eers ) >> reporter: it was like a pep rally: children waving american flags and paper astronauts as nasa administrator jim bridenstine introduced the newest class. en ladies and gentlemen, i present to you our commercial crew astronauts. a cheers ) ni reporter: nasa hopes by next year to blast nine of them to te international space station, aboard two space crafts designed and built by boeing and spacex. so it's like a taxi to space. t it is-- it is a space taxi. >> reporter: you just figure out which one is going to give you a better deal. >> in the long run, that's correct, so long as they're meeting nasa requirements and being safe. >> reporter
nasa today introduced the nine men and women who will lead the u.s. into the next era of space flight. for seven years, american astronauts have had to hitch rides into space on russian rockets. that will soon change. avid begnaud reports from the johnson space center in houston. >> for the first time since 2011, we are on the brink of launching american astronauts on american rockets from american soil. ter:eers ) >> reporter: it was like a pep rally: children waving american flags...
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Jul 19, 2011
07/11
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we care about it just like the nasa people do. >> and liftoff -- >> reporter: next spring, nasa expects to pick two finalists, and sometime in 2015, launch astronauts on the first commercial flight to the space station. mark strassmann, cbs news, boulder, colorado. >>> coming up a little bit later on "the early show," the latest on the uk hacking scandal, as lawmakers grill rupert murdoch and his son. >>> plus the results of a special investigation into the safety of america's nuclear power plants. >>> and, teen sensation rebecca black performs the much-anticipated follow-up to her mega hit "friday." that's the "cbs morning news" for this tuesday. thanks for watching, everyone, i'm betty nguyen. have a great day. i'm betty nguyen. have a great day. ,,,,,,,,
we care about it just like the nasa people do. >> and liftoff -- >> reporter: next spring, nasa expects to pick two finalists, and sometime in 2015, launch astronauts on the first commercial flight to the space station. mark strassmann, cbs news, boulder, colorado. >>> coming up a little bit later on "the early show," the latest on the uk hacking scandal, as lawmakers grill rupert murdoch and his son. >>> plus the results of a special investigation into...
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Feb 27, 2014
02/14
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allowed by nasa. this is the "cbs morning news." ♪ [ engine revving ] [ tires screech ] ♪ [ male announcer ] that was bold. real bold. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] don't wait for awesome... totino's pizza rolls gets you there in just 60 seconds. ♪ totino's pizza rolls gets you there in just 60 seconds. winter is rough. especially inside... luckily, the kmart semi-annual home sale is on now. and shop your way members get $5 back in points for every $30 they spend in home. kmart. >>> pope francis found his mini me wednesday. the small boy was dressed in a papal ensemble in st. peter square. now, the pope stopped to kiss the child. the boy cries as he is lifted toward the pope. he was dressed up for a pre-lent carnival celebration. >>> the relentless winter has caused plenty of misery this season, but a group of miners is praising the bad weather. as jim axelrod reports, all that snow has meant big business for them. >> reporter: while there's been no shortage of reasons to curse the weather the last
allowed by nasa. this is the "cbs morning news." ♪ [ engine revving ] [ tires screech ] ♪ [ male announcer ] that was bold. real bold. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] don't wait for awesome... totino's pizza rolls gets you there in just 60 seconds. ♪ totino's pizza rolls gets you there in just 60 seconds. winter is rough. especially inside... luckily, the kmart semi-annual home sale is on now. and shop your way members get $5 back in points for every $30 they spend in home. kmart....
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Aug 6, 2012
08/12
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multiple tests have shown the bay bridge is safe. " a letter to 90 nasa rover scheduled to touch down on mars. don knapp at nasa ames research center scientists are gathering to watch the critical moments call the " seven minutes of terror " >>> today and it is about the landing getting the rover safely down to the surface of the red planet and again a 2 year-long expedition of information gathering including evidence of life. >>> no one on earth will see the curiosity rover on his descent to mars thousands expected at nasa ames to get the first signals telling whether it survives or fail. among them chris mckay >>> all the watching the clock if this land successfully in a big sigh of relief, and then years of exploration on mars. >>> the new curiosity will have to survive heat and complications of being lowered from the ship. >>> there's a possibility will find a different kind of life than on earth a second genesis >>> the reliever will scoot but rock and soil and analyze and with a spectrometer chisholm when a march that water and had the habit that we should be on track to see wha
multiple tests have shown the bay bridge is safe. " a letter to 90 nasa rover scheduled to touch down on mars. don knapp at nasa ames research center scientists are gathering to watch the critical moments call the " seven minutes of terror " >>> today and it is about the landing getting the rover safely down to the surface of the red planet and again a 2 year-long expedition of information gathering including evidence of life. >>> no one on earth will see the...
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Mar 27, 2019
03/19
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if approved, regulations would go into effect immediately. >>> the goal for nasa, vice president mike pence wants to get u.s. astronauts back on the moon within five years. >> the space policy directive one, president trump finally gave nasa the clear direction and clear mission that it needs. as president trump said, we will return american astronauts to the moon for the first time since 19 72 for long term exploration. >> pence says nasa needs to meet its moon deadline by any means necessary, even if nasa rockets need to be replaced by commercial rockets. >> nasa just canceled the first ever all female spacewalk thanks to a wardrobe problem. the historic walk by two female astronauts was scheduled to take place friday, but the problem is nasa says only one medium size spacesuit was prepped for a spacewalk. so instead of devoting extensive crew time to make the other medium space worthy, nasa has decided to send one of the female astronauts on friday's spacewalk with a male colleague instead. >> they need to expand their wardrobe and i think my wife is just the person to do that. >>
if approved, regulations would go into effect immediately. >>> the goal for nasa, vice president mike pence wants to get u.s. astronauts back on the moon within five years. >> the space policy directive one, president trump finally gave nasa the clear direction and clear mission that it needs. as president trump said, we will return american astronauts to the moon for the first time since 19 72 for long term exploration. >> pence says nasa needs to meet its moon deadline by...
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May 14, 2019
05/19
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. >> plus, the ambitious timeline for nasa. >>> i'm tracking a few showers. i'll show you futurecast and when we'll see widespread rain across the bay area coming up. the bay area coming up. >>> a major security breach at whatsapp. now the company is encouraging users to update their app. they said users might be vulnerable to malicious spyware being installed on their phones. whatsapp has boasted about its high security in the past. >>> the trump campaign is asking congress for $1.6 billion to get nasa's new moon mission off the ground four years earlier than originally planned. >> it's not by accident that some countries around the world are going to the moon. not all of them are going to the moon just to collect rocks. it's a strategic imperative. >> reporter: when jim became nasa's administrator last year, a planned moon landing was a decade away. >> ladies and gentlemen,s that's not good enough. >> nasa is not currently capable of landing astronauts on the moon. we need to change the organization, not the mission. >> we've seen projects get canceled with
. >> plus, the ambitious timeline for nasa. >>> i'm tracking a few showers. i'll show you futurecast and when we'll see widespread rain across the bay area coming up. the bay area coming up. >>> a major security breach at whatsapp. now the company is encouraging users to update their app. they said users might be vulnerable to malicious spyware being installed on their phones. whatsapp has boasted about its high security in the past. >>> the trump campaign is...
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Sep 4, 2022
09/22
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second time in five days nasa has been luckless on the launch pad. both times a liquid hydrogen leak was an issue. frustration comes after years of delays and billions of dollars in costover runs. lilia, this rocket still hasn't left the launch pad. >> that's right. we were waiting all day today, back and forth, a lot of communication from nasa to the public and it didn't happen. big picture here, mark, how important is it for nasa that artemis one succeed? >> reporter: it is everything. nasa has a timeline to return astronauts to the moon, but first they have to have a successful test flight around the moon and back from artemis one, a minimum of drama and right now they can't even get it off the ground. lilia. >> from the kennedy space center, mark strassmann, thank you. >>> tonight president biden is at camp david for the labor day weekend, but former president trump is returning to the campaign trail. these supporters are lining up in wilkes-barre, pennsylvania. now with details. >> reporter: good evening, lilia. this is trump's first rally since
second time in five days nasa has been luckless on the launch pad. both times a liquid hydrogen leak was an issue. frustration comes after years of delays and billions of dollars in costover runs. lilia, this rocket still hasn't left the launch pad. >> that's right. we were waiting all day today, back and forth, a lot of communication from nasa to the public and it didn't happen. big picture here, mark, how important is it for nasa that artemis one succeed? >> reporter: it is...
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Jul 26, 2012
07/12
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nasa is also looking at mars on a mission straight out of hollywood. that's next. ,, >> television and the space program grow together and nasa has always been savvy about using television to promote their space adventures. but bill whitaker reports that nasa has gone hollywood with a new film on the internet that is out of this world. >> 350 nasa scientist at the gp l laboratory in pasadena had been working in obscurity for nine years, there were designing and building and programming the third and biggest and by far the most complex mars rover. the onetime " curiosity " it is now hurtling to mars on a two and half billion dollar mission to search for signs that there was, or is, life on the red planet >> this mission is the coolest thing i think we have ever done. >> he is part of the team, not as a scientist but as a video producer. with curiosity one week from landing, he says the scientists are ready for their closeups. >> when people look at it, it looks crazy. sometimes when we look at it, it is crazy. >> this movie is the hottest thing ever on
nasa is also looking at mars on a mission straight out of hollywood. that's next. ,, >> television and the space program grow together and nasa has always been savvy about using television to promote their space adventures. but bill whitaker reports that nasa has gone hollywood with a new film on the internet that is out of this world. >> 350 nasa scientist at the gp l laboratory in pasadena had been working in obscurity for nine years, there were designing and building and...
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Sep 30, 2013
09/13
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nasa wants a u.s. rocket, one way or the other, and a u.s. spacecraft to launch american astronauts to the space station it say sign of pride, a symbol of superpower status. >> and liftoff, the final liftoff. >> horwitz says the last shuttle mission in july 2011 left the space station overstocked deliberately so nasa wouldn't need help getting cargo to the space station. until now. this morning the virginia-based orbital science corporations cargo ship cygnus successfully docked at the space station. >> when nasa knew they were going to retire the shuttle they knew they had to replace its ability to deliver cargo to the space station. space x is flying missions to the station, now with this successful test flight orbital joins the game and this is a big deal to nasa. they need both of these spacecraft to keep it supplied and operational. >> two significant developments in space today. >> the olympic flame has started its journey to sochi, russia, for the 2014 witnesser games. an actress dressedance ancient priest es used the sun's rays to lig
nasa wants a u.s. rocket, one way or the other, and a u.s. spacecraft to launch american astronauts to the space station it say sign of pride, a symbol of superpower status. >> and liftoff, the final liftoff. >> horwitz says the last shuttle mission in july 2011 left the space station overstocked deliberately so nasa wouldn't need help getting cargo to the space station. until now. this morning the virginia-based orbital science corporations cargo ship cygnus successfully docked at...
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Dec 5, 2014
12/14
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nasa ames played a big role in the heat shield. that's one of the biggest challenges for the spaceship. it will re-enter the atmosphere faster and encounter more heat than any other manned mission. live in the newsroom, ryan takeo, kpix 5. >> some of those astronauts that will go to mars in 2030, they are in elementary school right now. >> right. >> probably so. >> and your father is there today. >> my dad is there so he was really happy that they launched this morning. >> how exciting. is he going to send us pictures. hopefully. check my phone. maybe he did. >> the weather was spectacular there. >>> our weather is going to be stormy. good morning,everyone. take a look at our hi-def doppler radar. nothing on the screen to write home about right now except for that big blog of moisture at stockton that is lifting north. otherwise we have a new system to the north of the bay area clouding us up right now. we have areas of dense fog as well in santa rosa at 54 degrees even causing some condensation in the form of drizzle and mist. rig
nasa ames played a big role in the heat shield. that's one of the biggest challenges for the spaceship. it will re-enter the atmosphere faster and encounter more heat than any other manned mission. live in the newsroom, ryan takeo, kpix 5. >> some of those astronauts that will go to mars in 2030, they are in elementary school right now. >> right. >> probably so. >> and your father is there today. >> my dad is there so he was really happy that they launched this...
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Nov 30, 2018
11/18
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nasa has not forgotten about the moon. >> it's beautiful, mike. it really is. >> reporter: 1969, nearly 50 years ago, we landed on the moon. 1972 we left and never went back. today nasa says that's going to change. >> we believe there is a lot of amazing science that we can do on the surface of the moon. >> reporter: nasa is announcing a partnership with nine private aerospace companies to develop small robotic landers. these companies would design and build small rovers that will explore the surface with modern technology, not even dreamed of decades ago. >> nasa has a great history of working with industry. >> reporter: dr. steven beckwith says the selected group is interesting because some are well known like lockheed martin. others we've never heard of like orbit beyond or moon express. each has already submitted proposals of rover prototypes. dr. beckwith believes this move is in our national interest. >> you can see that some of our national competitors, china, japan, india, they're all e eating their own industries are of great strategic im
nasa has not forgotten about the moon. >> it's beautiful, mike. it really is. >> reporter: 1969, nearly 50 years ago, we landed on the moon. 1972 we left and never went back. today nasa says that's going to change. >> we believe there is a lot of amazing science that we can do on the surface of the moon. >> reporter: nasa is announcing a partnership with nine private aerospace companies to develop small robotic landers. these companies would design and build small rovers...
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Feb 24, 2024
02/24
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a nasa navigational experiment. flight controllers tapped into it to help guide the lander softly to the surface. >> this is the assembly room. >> reporter: when we visited the company last year, the ceo showed us that nasa instrument. >> this helps with navigation. it's running independent of our navigation system, but this is nasa's entrant into how you do precision landing on the moon without gps. >> reporter: nasa administrator, bill nelson. >> it was a nasa payload that saved the day. >> reporter: odysseus targeted its landing near the moon's south pole, prized by nasa because its craters may contain ice, which would mean water, a necessity for deeper space travel. >> now we're having these commercial company goes way out there to the moon and they are serving as scouts ahead of us sending our astronauts. >> reporter: odysseus has one week to work. ultra cold lunar night will set in and freeze its solar batteries, but what an arrival. >>> that's it for the news at 5:00. cbs news bay area with juliette goodrich
a nasa navigational experiment. flight controllers tapped into it to help guide the lander softly to the surface. >> this is the assembly room. >> reporter: when we visited the company last year, the ceo showed us that nasa instrument. >> this helps with navigation. it's running independent of our navigation system, but this is nasa's entrant into how you do precision landing on the moon without gps. >> reporter: nasa administrator, bill nelson. >> it was a nasa...
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Aug 29, 2022
08/22
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nasa released an eerie clip of real sounds captured from a black hole, sort of. i'm not buying this. nasa says in reality human ears couldn't actually hear those frequencies and the clips were boosted exponentially to achieve the resulting sounds. to me the sound is a compression of air. there's no air in a black hole, so what are these frequencies? >> i don't know. i expect you to to dig deeper into this. >> i have more questions after seeing that than i did before. > >> it will get noticeably hotter hotter this week, as we joked about this earlier, there are trip in triple digits at the end end of the 7-day forecast and you would've hoped we wouldn't have to cram that bacon but it is coming back and it's going to to be hot. today worked out pretty nicely, low to mid 80s for daytime highs today for our warmest inland locations. take a a look at concord and livermore, livermore, those numbers are going up about five degrees tomw degrees tomorrow and that's about average. it's what's coming later in the week that starts to stand out, so let's walk through this in
nasa released an eerie clip of real sounds captured from a black hole, sort of. i'm not buying this. nasa says in reality human ears couldn't actually hear those frequencies and the clips were boosted exponentially to achieve the resulting sounds. to me the sound is a compression of air. there's no air in a black hole, so what are these frequencies? >> i don't know. i expect you to to dig deeper into this. >> i have more questions after seeing that than i did before. > >>...
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Aug 26, 2022
08/22
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lift off. >> after almost 40 years at nasa, with that moment going to be like? >> i can't even begin to think about it. i have emotional, it will be very rewarding, it will be very special for sure. >> why emotional? >> it reflects on how blessed i am to be in this position to be able to do this. it's a pretty big deal. >> reporter: cbs news. > >> a san jose thrift store has raised more than $50,000 for people in ukraine, with disabil. with disabilities. hope threads has committed a portion of the stores proceeds to nonprofit organizations helping ukrainians ukrainians who weren't able to lead leave the war-torn country. country. >> just further our mission to support people with development disabilities, not just here but also in other countries, and at the time what ukraine is currently experiencing we felt that it was the right thing to . to do. >> reporter: in support of the fund raising a local service provided by hope thrift, santa clara county awarded $285,000 to to the organization. > >> coming up, rent has been getting more and more expensive, expensive
lift off. >> after almost 40 years at nasa, with that moment going to be like? >> i can't even begin to think about it. i have emotional, it will be very rewarding, it will be very special for sure. >> why emotional? >> it reflects on how blessed i am to be in this position to be able to do this. it's a pretty big deal. >> reporter: cbs news. > >> a san jose thrift store has raised more than $50,000 for people in ukraine, with disabil. with disabilities....
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Feb 28, 2021
02/21
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or "you can't work for nasa "? >> there are always moments inside you question oh, is it because i'm young? is it because i'm a young female? is it because i'm a young black female? you have to just keep pushing towards the stars. >> diaz: growing up they couldn't all afford luxuries like space camp, but their families found a way. >> if there was not a local library, if we didn't have pbs-- which is free-- those things make it accessible, no matter what your income is. >> those struggles just made us even better at our jobs. like my grandma said "hechale ganas, mija." give it your all. and that's i think what all of us do on mars perseverance. >> diaz: they say their greatest mission is helping the next generation. that is the "cbs weekend news" for this saturday. i'm adriana diaz in chicago. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh >>> sn is a bank robbery requires a bomb squad. they found at the scene. >>> the theft and return of lady gaga's dogs. the mystery woman who coul
or "you can't work for nasa "? >> there are always moments inside you question oh, is it because i'm young? is it because i'm a young female? is it because i'm a young black female? you have to just keep pushing towards the stars. >> diaz: growing up they couldn't all afford luxuries like space camp, but their families found a way. >> if there was not a local library, if we didn't have pbs-- which is free-- those things make it accessible, no matter what your income...
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Jul 14, 2021
07/21
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no one has seen more liftoffs firsthand than paul dye, the longest serving flight director in nasa's history. he is now retired and has a new book. guy invited jeff glore to his home in nevada for a chat. >> reporter: there is no grass or a pool, but there is a runway. >> we just go. we kind of treat our airplanes like bicycles, you know. if you want to go to the end of the street, you go to the end of the street. >> reporter: on a windy morning outside reno, we went up in dye's rv-8. a flight path took us near air station fallon, home of the real top gun. >> we try to stay out of top gun's air space. probably a good idea, yes. >> reporter: for years he was head of kit planes magazines where he still contributes. his most impressive resume is with nasa where he worked more than 30 years, including 20 years as a flight director, more than anyone else in history. >> i consider myself kind of a feel general. i really like being in the battle. i like being in the thick of things. and i kind of recognized early on that unless i became a politician and ran for office, i wasn't going to be
no one has seen more liftoffs firsthand than paul dye, the longest serving flight director in nasa's history. he is now retired and has a new book. guy invited jeff glore to his home in nevada for a chat. >> reporter: there is no grass or a pool, but there is a runway. >> we just go. we kind of treat our airplanes like bicycles, you know. if you want to go to the end of the street, you go to the end of the street. >> reporter: on a windy morning outside reno, we went up in...